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Yokosuka

Yokosuka (横須賀市, Yokosuka-shi) is a city in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.

Yokosuka
横須賀市
Top:View of downtown Yokosuka from Verny Seaside Park, Middle:Mikasa Battleship Monument and Heihachirō Togō Statue, Kurihama Matthew Perry Park, Bottom:Yokosuka Naval Curry, Kannon Cape and seaside park (all item for left to right)
Yokosuka
Yokosuka in Japan
Coordinates: 35°16′53.4″N 139°40′19.5″E / 35.281500°N 139.672083°E / 35.281500; 139.672083
Country Japan
RegionKantō
Prefecture Kanagawa
Government
 • MayorKatsuaki Kamiji
Area
 • Total100.8 km2 (38.9 sq mi)
Population
 (October 1, 2020)
 • Total388,078
 • Density3,850/km2 (10,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+09:00
Postal code
238-8550
Area code14201-8
WebsiteOfficial website
Yokosuka
Japanese name
Kanji横須賀
Hiraganaよこすか
Katakanaヨコスカ
Transcriptions
RomanizationYokosuka
Yokosuka City Hall
View of Mount Fuji and downtown Yokosuka, seen from Uraga Channel

As of October 2017, the city has a population of 409,478, and a population density of 4,066 inhabitants per square kilometre (10,530/sq mi).[1] The total area is 100.7 km2 (38.9 sq mi). Yokosuka is the 11th most populous city in the Greater Tokyo Area, and the 12th in the Kantō region. The city is host to United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka.

Geography edit

Yokosuka occupies most of Miura Peninsula, and is bordered by the mouth of Tokyo Bay to the east and Sagami Bay on the Pacific Ocean on the west.

Surrounding municipalities edit

History edit

Pre-modern period edit

The area around present-day Yokosuka City has been inhabited for thousands of years. Archaeologists have found stone tools and shell middens from the Japanese Paleolithic period and ceramic shards from the Jōmon and Kofun periods at numerous locations in the area. During the Heian period, local warlord Muraoka Tamemichi established Kinugasa Castle in 1063. He became the ancestor of the Miura clan, which subsequently dominated eastern Sagami Province for the next several hundred years. The Miura clan supported Minamoto no Yoritomo in the foundation of the Kamakura shogunate, but were later annihilated by Hōjō Tokiyori in 1247. However, the family name was reassigned to a supporter of the Hōjō clan, and the Miura continued to rule Miura Peninsula through the Muromachi period until their defeat at Arai Castle in a 1518 attack by Hōjō Sōun. Following the defeat of the Later Hōjō clan at the Battle of Odawara, Toyotomi Hideyoshi transferred Tokugawa Ieyasu to take control over the Kantō region, including Yokosuka in 1590.

The adventurer William Adams (inspiration for a character in the novel Shōgun), the first Briton to set foot in Japan, arrived at Uraga aboard the Dutch trading vessel Liefde in 1600. In 1612, he was granted the title of samurai and a fief in Hemi within the boundaries of present-day Yokosuka, due to his services to the Tokugawa shogunate. A monument to William Adams (called Miura Anjin in Japanese) is a local landmark in Yokosuka.

During the Edo period, Yokosuka tenryō territory was controlled directly by the Tokugawa shogunate, but administered through various hatamoto. Due to its strategic location at the entrance to Tokyo Bay, the Shogunate established the post of Uraga Bugyō in 1720, and all shipping into the bay was required to stop for inspection. As concerns over the increasing number of incursions by foreign vessels and attempts to end Japan's self-imposed national seclusion policy, the Shogunate established a number of coastal artillery batteries around Yokosuka, including an outpost at Ōtsu in 1842. However, despite these efforts, in 1853, United States naval Commodore Matthew Perry arrived in Tokyo Bay with his fleet of Black Ships and came ashore at Kurihama, in southern Yokosuka, leading to the opening of diplomatic and trade relations between Japan and the United States. The Kanrin Maru sailed from Yokosuka in 1860 with the first Japanese diplomatic embassy to the United States in 1860.

 
Construction of the Yokosuka arsenal c.1870

During the turbulent Bakumatsu period, the Shogunate selected Yokosuka as the site for a modern naval base, and hired the French engineer Léonce Verny in 1865 to oversee the development of shipbuilding facilities, beginning with Yokosuka Iron Foundry. Yokosuka Naval Arsenal became the first modern arsenal to be created in Japan. The construction of the arsenal was the central point of a global modern infrastructure, that was to prove an important first step for the modernization of Japan's industry. Modern buildings, the Hashirimizu waterway, foundries, brick factories, and technical schools to train Japanese technicians were established.

Meiji period to present edit

After the Meiji Restoration, the arsenal was taken over by the Imperial Japanese Navy, and the area of modern Yokosuka was reorganized into Uraga Town and numerous villages within Miura District, Kanagawa Prefecture. Yokosuka Village was elevated to town status in 1878 and was made the capital of Miura District. In 1889, the Yokosuka Line railway was opened, connecting Yokosuka to Yokohama and Tokyo. Yokosuka was elevated to city status on February 15, 1907. From 1916, Oppama in Yokosuka was developed as the Yokosuka Naval Air Technical Arsenal, and many of the combat aircraft subsequently operated by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service were developed or tested at Yokosuka. Yokosuka Naval Arsenal also continued to expand in the early 20th century, and its production included battleships such as Yamashiro, and aircraft carriers such as Hiryū and Shōkaku. Smaller warships were constructed at the privately owned Uraga Dock Company. Yokosuka Naval District was the home port of the IJN 1st Fleet.[citation needed]

The Great Kantō earthquake of 1923 caused severe damage to Yokosuka, including the naval base which lost two years' operations of oil supplies. The city continued to expand in 1933 with the annexation of neighboring Kinugasa Village and Taura Town in 1933 and Kurihama Village in 1937. In 1943, the city also annexed the neighboring towns and villages of Uraga, Kitashitaura, Okusu, Nagai and Takeyama, as well as Zushi.[citation needed]

 
The U.S. Navy base at Yokosuka

During World War II, Yokosuka was bombed on April 18, 1942, by American B-25 bombers in the Doolittle Raid with little damage as a retaliation to the attack on Pearl Harbor. Aside from minor sporadic tactical air raids by United States Navy aircraft, it was not bombed again during the war; however, from 1938 to 1945 more than 260 caves in more than 20 separate tunnel/cave networks were built throughout the area, with at least 27 kilometers of known tunnels within the grounds of Yokosuka Naval Base. Many more tunnels are scattered throughout the surrounding areas. During the war, these tunnels and caves provided areas in which work could be done in secrecy, safe from air attacks. A 500-bed hospital, a large electrical power generating facility, and a midget submarine factory and warehouse were among the many facilities built. American occupation forces landed at Yokosuka on August 30, 1945, after the surrender of Japan, and the naval base has been used by the US Navy since that time. The caves were used for storage and as an emergency shelter during the Korean War.[2]

From the 1950s, United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka has been home port for the United States Seventh Fleet, and played a critical support role in the Korean War and the Vietnam War.[3] Yokosuka was the site of many anti-war protests during the late 1960s and 1970s. The nuclear-powered USS George Washington, formerly based at Yokosuka, was the first U.S. nuclear-powered ship that had been permanently based in Japan. The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force also operates a military port next to the American base, as well as numerous training facilities at scattered locations around the city. For those reasons, there are a few hundred Americans and a thousand Filipinos in Yokosuka.[4]

 
Yokosuka Museum of Art, design by Riken Yamamoto in 2007

In 2001, Yokosuka was designated as a core city, with increased autonomy from the central government.[citation needed]

Economy edit

Aside from the economic impact of its various military facilities, Yokosuka is also an industrial city, with factories operated by Nissan Motors and its affiliated subsidiaries employing thousands of local residents. The Nissan Leaf, Nissan Cube, and Nissan Juke models are assembled in the 520,000-square-metre (5,600,000 sq ft) Oppama plant [ja] in Yokosuka. The factory began operations in 1961 where the Nissan Bluebird was originally built.[5] Every May, there is a festival celebrating Japanese curry, which draws 50,000 attendees each year.[6] The plant is adjacent to Nissan's Research and Development Center, the Oppama Proving Ground and the Oppama Wharf, from which Nissan ships vehicles made at Oppama and Nissan's other two Japanese vehicle assembly plants to other regions of Japan and overseas.[citation needed]

The Yokosuka Research Park, established in 1997, is a major center for the Japanese telecommunications industry, and is where many of the wireless, mobile communications related companies have set up their research and development centers and joint testing facilities.[citation needed]

Demographics edit

Per Japanese census data,[7][8] Yokosuka's population peaked around the year 1990 and has declined since then. Foreign citizens in Yokosuka are mainly Filipinos, Koreans, Chinese, and Americans.[9]

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1920 96,351—    
1930 110,301+14.5%
1940 237,523+115.3%
1950 250,533+5.5%
1960 287,309+14.7%
1970 347,576+21.0%
1980 421,107+21.2%
1990 433,358+2.9%
2000 428,645−1.1%
2010 418,325−2.4%
2020 388,078−7.2%

Transportation edit

Rail edit

Road edit

Education edit

Yokosuka's public elementary and junior high schools are operated by the Yokosuka Education System, a department of the Yokosuka City Department of Education.[10] Many of Yokosuka's public high schools, including Yokosuka High School, are operated by the Kanagawa Prefectural Board of Education.[11]

The city operates one municipal high school, Yokosuka Sogo High School.

Energy disasters edit

On 26 October 2011 Yokosuka held its annual nuclear accident evacuation drill. This drill was first held in 2008 when the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington was employed at the US naval base near this city. About 70 people, residents and firefighters took part in the drill. Firefighters ordered the residents of the city to stay indoors, assuming abnormally high levels of radiation around the US base. Radioactive contamination was controlled in the emergency response center by city officials. The US Navy refused to take part in all this, because of the impossibility of radiation leaking outside the base.[citation needed] However, in December 2011 another drill was scheduled with Yokosuka and other cities to prepare for the possibility that people on board the ship might be exposed to radiation.[12]

One unintended consequence of anti-nuclear sentiment is the construction of coal fired power plants, which causes air pollution and worsens global warming. As of 2020, two coal-fired power plants are proposed to be built in Yokosuka, even despite the climate emergency. These coal-fired power plants are being built without a full environmental review, and local residents are suing the government of Japan over its construction. Environment minister Shinjirō Koizumi has been "a target of the activists' wrath" because of his support for this project.[13]

Sister city relations edit

Yokosuka has twin-town relationships with four other cities.[14] They are (in chronological order):

Yokosuka has a friendship-city relationship with one city:[14]

Local attractions edit

Sarushima is an uninhabited island in the Tokyo Bay, accessible by ferry from Yokosuka.[15]

The Mikasa, flagship of Admiral Togo at the Battle of Tsushima, built in Britain by Vickers, is preserved on dry land at Yokosuka. It is a museum, complete with actors dressed like members of the original crew, and can be visited for an entrance fee of 600 yen.[16]

The Club Alliance enlisted club, which lies just inside the main gate of Yokosuka Naval Base, opened in 1983. It replaced the old Club Alliance which was demolished to make way for the Prince Hotel. The old Club Alliance is where Ryudo Uzaki got his start playing rock and roll. "The Honch", a mecca for shopping and nightlife and located just outside the Yokosuka Naval Base's main gates, is a popular attraction for tourists and sailors stationed nearby, as well as local Japanese residents.[citation needed]

The Yokosuka Arts Theatre, part of the Bay Square complex by Kenzō Tange, is a venue for opera, orchestral concerts, chamber music, and films.[17]

Dobuita Street is situated in Yokosuka, close to the U.S. naval base. Therefore, this High Street has a very American influence, with many shops accepting U.S dollars. In the evening the street turns into the local bar and club district for the area.[citation needed]

A museum in memory of rock musician Hide, a native of Yokosuka, opened on July 20, 2000.[18] It has been reported that Japan's former prime minister, Junichiro Koizumi, was influential in getting it built as he was a big fan of Hide's band X Japan.[19] The museum stayed open, past its original three-year plan, for five years, before closing on 25 September 2005.[18]

Yokosuka is considered a place of origin of sukajan jackets. These embroidered satin bombers are a popular souvenir from the city, especially the more expensive, handmade ones.[20]

In popular culture edit

Yokosuka, including Dobuita Street, is the setting for the 1999 video game Shenmue.[21] Yokosuka is also depicted in the game's anime adaptation. City officials cooperated with animators.[22] The 2000 PlayStation game Front Mission 3, and Shohei Imamura's 1961 New Wave film Pigs and Battleships take place in Yokosuka. Additionally, Yokosuka is the location of the climactic battle in the Godzilla film Terror of Mechagodzilla.[citation needed]

Yokosuka is a major location in the Arpeggio of Blue Steel franchise, where it serves as one of Japan's few remaining naval facilities, the only one equipped with a functional shipyard and maritime academy. Due to rising sea levels, the port is built above the ruins of the submerged original city's remains. All the main cast lived and attended school there before forming the privateer fleet Blue Steel that uses it as their home port.[citation needed]

Notable people from Yokosuka edit

Politicians edit

Culture and the arts edit

Entertainment edit

Athletes edit

Others edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Basic Resident Register registration population". Yokosuka City. Retrieved 2018-02-21.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Yokosuka cave network dug by Japanese during World War II sealed". Stripes.com. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  3. ^ "history.html". Navy.mil. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  4. ^ . April 13, 2018. Archived from the original on April 14, 2018. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  5. ^ 日産自動車株式会社. . Nissan-Global.com. Archived from the original on April 8, 2016. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  6. ^ "Japanese curry loved by all generations". Stripes Japan. 4 November 2018. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
  7. ^ Yokosuka population statistics (in Japanese)
  8. ^ Yokosuka population statistics (1995-2020)
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-04-14. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved December 9, 2005.
  11. ^ [1] December 16, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ NHK-world (26 October 2011)Yokosuka conducts nuclear accident drill May 11, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Tabuchi, Hiroko (2020-02-03). "Japan Races to Build New Coal-Burning Power Plants, Despite the Climate Risks". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-02-03.
  14. ^ a b 横須賀市行政サービス情報 – 「姉妹都市、友好都市」 (企画調整部 国際交流課) [Yokosuka Administrative Service Information– Sister Cities, Friendship Cities]. Yokosuka City. Archived from the original on 2007-06-21. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  15. ^ Ryall, Julian (28 April 2010). "arushima: Welcome to Monkey Island". CNN Travel. Cable News Network. Retrieved 21 November 2012.
  16. ^ "Japan's 114-year-old battleship Mikasa: A relic of another time". CNET.com. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  17. ^ . Yokosuka Arts Theatre. Archived from the original on 19 April 2016. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  18. ^ a b . musicjapanplus.jp. Archived from the original on 2014-02-20. Retrieved 2014-02-03.
  19. ^ "Crystal Skulls: 'hatsumode' for the groove generation; Yokosuka joins the party". The Japan Times. 2003-02-01. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 2021-05-30. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  21. ^ BATDORFF, ALLISON (21 April 2006). "Yokosuka street hosts players of video game". Stars and Stripes. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  22. ^ "Yokosuka City - Anime News Network". www.animenewsnetwork.com. Retrieved 12 April 2022.

External links edit

  • Official Website (in Japanese)
  •   Geographic data related to Yokosuka at OpenStreetMap


yokosuka, other, uses, disambiguation, 横須賀市, city, kanagawa, prefecture, japan, 横須賀市core, citytop, view, downtown, from, verny, seaside, park, middle, mikasa, battleship, monument, heihachirō, togō, statue, kurihama, matthew, perry, park, bottom, naval, curry,. For other uses see Yokosuka disambiguation Yokosuka 横須賀市 Yokosuka shi is a city in Kanagawa Prefecture Japan Yokosuka 横須賀市Core cityTop View of downtown Yokosuka from Verny Seaside Park Middle Mikasa Battleship Monument and Heihachirō Togō Statue Kurihama Matthew Perry Park Bottom Yokosuka Naval Curry Kannon Cape and seaside park all item for left to right FlagSealYokosuka in Kanagawa PrefectureYokosukaYokosuka in JapanCoordinates 35 16 53 4 N 139 40 19 5 E 35 281500 N 139 672083 E 35 281500 139 672083Country JapanRegionKantōPrefecture KanagawaGovernment MayorKatsuaki KamijiArea Total100 8 km2 38 9 sq mi Population October 1 2020 Total388 078 Density3 850 km2 10 000 sq mi Time zoneUTC 09 00Postal code238 8550Area code14201 8WebsiteOfficial websiteYokosukaJapanese nameKanji横須賀HiraganaよこすかKatakanaヨコスカTranscriptionsRomanizationYokosukaYokosuka City HallView of Mount Fuji and downtown Yokosuka seen from Uraga ChannelAs of October 2017 update the city has a population of 409 478 and a population density of 4 066 inhabitants per square kilometre 10 530 sq mi 1 The total area is 100 7 km2 38 9 sq mi Yokosuka is the 11th most populous city in the Greater Tokyo Area and the 12th in the Kantō region The city is host to United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Surrounding municipalities 2 History 2 1 Pre modern period 2 2 Meiji period to present 3 Economy 4 Demographics 5 Transportation 5 1 Rail 5 2 Road 6 Education 7 Energy disasters 8 Sister city relations 9 Local attractions 10 In popular culture 11 Notable people from Yokosuka 11 1 Politicians 11 2 Culture and the arts 11 3 Entertainment 11 4 Athletes 11 5 Others 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksGeography editYokosuka occupies most of Miura Peninsula and is bordered by the mouth of Tokyo Bay to the east and Sagami Bay on the Pacific Ocean on the west Surrounding municipalities edit Kanazawa ku Yokohama Miura Hayama ZushiHistory editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pre modern period edit The area around present day Yokosuka City has been inhabited for thousands of years Archaeologists have found stone tools and shell middens from the Japanese Paleolithic period and ceramic shards from the Jōmon and Kofun periods at numerous locations in the area During the Heian period local warlord Muraoka Tamemichi established Kinugasa Castle in 1063 He became the ancestor of the Miura clan which subsequently dominated eastern Sagami Province for the next several hundred years The Miura clan supported Minamoto no Yoritomo in the foundation of the Kamakura shogunate but were later annihilated by Hōjō Tokiyori in 1247 However the family name was reassigned to a supporter of the Hōjō clan and the Miura continued to rule Miura Peninsula through the Muromachi period until their defeat at Arai Castle in a 1518 attack by Hōjō Sōun Following the defeat of the Later Hōjō clan at the Battle of Odawara Toyotomi Hideyoshi transferred Tokugawa Ieyasu to take control over the Kantō region including Yokosuka in 1590 The adventurer William Adams inspiration for a character in the novel Shōgun the first Briton to set foot in Japan arrived at Uraga aboard the Dutch trading vessel Liefde in 1600 In 1612 he was granted the title of samurai and a fief in Hemi within the boundaries of present day Yokosuka due to his services to the Tokugawa shogunate A monument to William Adams called Miura Anjin in Japanese is a local landmark in Yokosuka During the Edo period Yokosuka tenryō territory was controlled directly by the Tokugawa shogunate but administered through various hatamoto Due to its strategic location at the entrance to Tokyo Bay the Shogunate established the post of Uraga Bugyō in 1720 and all shipping into the bay was required to stop for inspection As concerns over the increasing number of incursions by foreign vessels and attempts to end Japan s self imposed national seclusion policy the Shogunate established a number of coastal artillery batteries around Yokosuka including an outpost at Ōtsu in 1842 However despite these efforts in 1853 United States naval Commodore Matthew Perry arrived in Tokyo Bay with his fleet of Black Ships and came ashore at Kurihama in southern Yokosuka leading to the opening of diplomatic and trade relations between Japan and the United States The Kanrin Maru sailed from Yokosuka in 1860 with the first Japanese diplomatic embassy to the United States in 1860 nbsp Construction of the Yokosuka arsenal c 1870During the turbulent Bakumatsu period the Shogunate selected Yokosuka as the site for a modern naval base and hired the French engineer Leonce Verny in 1865 to oversee the development of shipbuilding facilities beginning with Yokosuka Iron Foundry Yokosuka Naval Arsenal became the first modern arsenal to be created in Japan The construction of the arsenal was the central point of a global modern infrastructure that was to prove an important first step for the modernization of Japan s industry Modern buildings the Hashirimizu waterway foundries brick factories and technical schools to train Japanese technicians were established Meiji period to present edit After the Meiji Restoration the arsenal was taken over by the Imperial Japanese Navy and the area of modern Yokosuka was reorganized into Uraga Town and numerous villages within Miura District Kanagawa Prefecture Yokosuka Village was elevated to town status in 1878 and was made the capital of Miura District In 1889 the Yokosuka Line railway was opened connecting Yokosuka to Yokohama and Tokyo Yokosuka was elevated to city status on February 15 1907 From 1916 Oppama in Yokosuka was developed as the Yokosuka Naval Air Technical Arsenal and many of the combat aircraft subsequently operated by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service were developed or tested at Yokosuka Yokosuka Naval Arsenal also continued to expand in the early 20th century and its production included battleships such as Yamashiro and aircraft carriers such as Hiryu and Shōkaku Smaller warships were constructed at the privately owned Uraga Dock Company Yokosuka Naval District was the home port of the IJN 1st Fleet citation needed The Great Kantō earthquake of 1923 caused severe damage to Yokosuka including the naval base which lost two years operations of oil supplies The city continued to expand in 1933 with the annexation of neighboring Kinugasa Village and Taura Town in 1933 and Kurihama Village in 1937 In 1943 the city also annexed the neighboring towns and villages of Uraga Kitashitaura Okusu Nagai and Takeyama as well as Zushi citation needed nbsp The U S Navy base at YokosukaDuring World War II Yokosuka was bombed on April 18 1942 by American B 25 bombers in the Doolittle Raid with little damage as a retaliation to the attack on Pearl Harbor Aside from minor sporadic tactical air raids by United States Navy aircraft it was not bombed again during the war however from 1938 to 1945 more than 260 caves in more than 20 separate tunnel cave networks were built throughout the area with at least 27 kilometers of known tunnels within the grounds of Yokosuka Naval Base Many more tunnels are scattered throughout the surrounding areas During the war these tunnels and caves provided areas in which work could be done in secrecy safe from air attacks A 500 bed hospital a large electrical power generating facility and a midget submarine factory and warehouse were among the many facilities built American occupation forces landed at Yokosuka on August 30 1945 after the surrender of Japan and the naval base has been used by the US Navy since that time The caves were used for storage and as an emergency shelter during the Korean War 2 From the 1950s United States Fleet Activities Yokosuka has been home port for the United States Seventh Fleet and played a critical support role in the Korean War and the Vietnam War 3 Yokosuka was the site of many anti war protests during the late 1960s and 1970s The nuclear powered USS George Washington formerly based at Yokosuka was the first U S nuclear powered ship that had been permanently based in Japan The Japan Maritime Self Defense Force also operates a military port next to the American base as well as numerous training facilities at scattered locations around the city For those reasons there are a few hundred Americans and a thousand Filipinos in Yokosuka 4 nbsp Yokosuka Museum of Art design by Riken Yamamoto in 2007In 2001 Yokosuka was designated as a core city with increased autonomy from the central government citation needed Economy editAside from the economic impact of its various military facilities Yokosuka is also an industrial city with factories operated by Nissan Motors and its affiliated subsidiaries employing thousands of local residents The Nissan Leaf Nissan Cube and Nissan Juke models are assembled in the 520 000 square metre 5 600 000 sq ft Oppama plant ja in Yokosuka The factory began operations in 1961 where the Nissan Bluebird was originally built 5 Every May there is a festival celebrating Japanese curry which draws 50 000 attendees each year 6 The plant is adjacent to Nissan s Research and Development Center the Oppama Proving Ground and the Oppama Wharf from which Nissan ships vehicles made at Oppama and Nissan s other two Japanese vehicle assembly plants to other regions of Japan and overseas citation needed The Yokosuka Research Park established in 1997 is a major center for the Japanese telecommunications industry and is where many of the wireless mobile communications related companies have set up their research and development centers and joint testing facilities citation needed Demographics editPer Japanese census data 7 8 Yokosuka s population peaked around the year 1990 and has declined since then Foreign citizens in Yokosuka are mainly Filipinos Koreans Chinese and Americans 9 Historical populationYearPop 192096 351 1930110 301 14 5 1940237 523 115 3 1950250 533 5 5 1960287 309 14 7 1970347 576 21 0 1980421 107 21 2 1990433 358 2 9 2000428 645 1 1 2010418 325 2 4 2020388 078 7 2 Transportation editRail edit JR East Yokosuka Line Taura Yokosuka Kinugasa Kurihama Keikyu Main Line Oppama Keikyu Taura Anjinzuka Hemi Shioiri Yokosuka Chuō Kenritsu Daigaku Horinouchi Keikyu Ōtsu Mabori Kaigan Uraga Keikyu Kurihama Line Horinouchi Shin Ōtsu Kita Kurihama Keikyu Kurihama YRP Nobi Keikyu Nagasawa TsukuihamaRoad edit National Route 16 National Route 134 National Route 357Education editYokosuka s public elementary and junior high schools are operated by the Yokosuka Education System a department of the Yokosuka City Department of Education 10 Many of Yokosuka s public high schools including Yokosuka High School are operated by the Kanagawa Prefectural Board of Education 11 The city operates one municipal high school Yokosuka Sogo High School Energy disasters editOn 26 October 2011 Yokosuka held its annual nuclear accident evacuation drill This drill was first held in 2008 when the nuclear powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington was employed at the US naval base near this city About 70 people residents and firefighters took part in the drill Firefighters ordered the residents of the city to stay indoors assuming abnormally high levels of radiation around the US base Radioactive contamination was controlled in the emergency response center by city officials The US Navy refused to take part in all this because of the impossibility of radiation leaking outside the base citation needed However in December 2011 another drill was scheduled with Yokosuka and other cities to prepare for the possibility that people on board the ship might be exposed to radiation 12 One unintended consequence of anti nuclear sentiment is the construction of coal fired power plants which causes air pollution and worsens global warming As of 2020 two coal fired power plants are proposed to be built in Yokosuka even despite the climate emergency These coal fired power plants are being built without a full environmental review and local residents are suing the government of Japan over its construction Environment minister Shinjirō Koizumi has been a target of the activists wrath because of his support for this project 13 Sister city relations editYokosuka has twin town relationships with four other cities 14 They are in chronological order nbsp Corpus Christi Texas United States since 18 October 1962 nbsp Brest France since 26 November 1970 nbsp Fremantle Western Australia Australia since 25 April 1979 nbsp Medway Kent UK since 26 August 1998 nbsp Mazyr Belarus since 2008 nbsp Bharatpur Nepal since 15 march 2023 Yokosuka has a friendship city relationship with one city 14 nbsp Aizuwakamatsu Fukushima Japan since 17 April 2005 Local attractions editSarushima is an uninhabited island in the Tokyo Bay accessible by ferry from Yokosuka 15 The Mikasa flagship of Admiral Togo at the Battle of Tsushima built in Britain by Vickers is preserved on dry land at Yokosuka It is a museum complete with actors dressed like members of the original crew and can be visited for an entrance fee of 600 yen 16 The Club Alliance enlisted club which lies just inside the main gate of Yokosuka Naval Base opened in 1983 It replaced the old Club Alliance which was demolished to make way for the Prince Hotel The old Club Alliance is where Ryudo Uzaki got his start playing rock and roll The Honch a mecca for shopping and nightlife and located just outside the Yokosuka Naval Base s main gates is a popular attraction for tourists and sailors stationed nearby as well as local Japanese residents citation needed The Yokosuka Arts Theatre part of the Bay Square complex by Kenzō Tange is a venue for opera orchestral concerts chamber music and films 17 Dobuita Street is situated in Yokosuka close to the U S naval base Therefore this High Street has a very American influence with many shops accepting U S dollars In the evening the street turns into the local bar and club district for the area citation needed A museum in memory of rock musician Hide a native of Yokosuka opened on July 20 2000 18 It has been reported that Japan s former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi was influential in getting it built as he was a big fan of Hide s band X Japan 19 The museum stayed open past its original three year plan for five years before closing on 25 September 2005 18 Yokosuka is considered a place of origin of sukajan jackets These embroidered satin bombers are a popular souvenir from the city especially the more expensive handmade ones 20 In popular culture editYokosuka including Dobuita Street is the setting for the 1999 video game Shenmue 21 Yokosuka is also depicted in the game s anime adaptation City officials cooperated with animators 22 The 2000 PlayStation game Front Mission 3 and Shohei Imamura s 1961 New Wave film Pigs and Battleships take place in Yokosuka Additionally Yokosuka is the location of the climactic battle in the Godzilla film Terror of Mechagodzilla citation needed Yokosuka is a major location in the Arpeggio of Blue Steel franchise where it serves as one of Japan s few remaining naval facilities the only one equipped with a functional shipyard and maritime academy Due to rising sea levels the port is built above the ruins of the submerged original city s remains All the main cast lived and attended school there before forming the privateer fleet Blue Steel that uses it as their home port citation needed Notable people from Yokosuka editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Politicians edit Junichiro Koizumi former Prime Minister of Japan Yoriko Madoka politician Yuto Yoshida politicianCulture and the arts edit Hitoshi Ashinano manga artist Kazumasa Hirai author Miyako Ishiuchi photographer Kazuo Kamimura manga artist Kōji Kumeta manga artist Kazutaka Miyatake anime designer Minoru Nojima pianist David Jay Reed artist actor photographer graphic designer lecturerEntertainment edit Donnalyn Bartolome singer actress hide musician Honoka Inoue voice actress Kikuko Inoue voice actress Rika Ishikawa singer Ichiro Ito musician Kaede dancer model and actress member of J pop girlgroups Happiness and E girls Yusuke Kamiji actor Josh Kelly actor Kie Kitano gravure idol Kotaro Koizumi actor Yōsuke Kubozuka actor MAA singer MadeinTYO rapper Eri Shingyōji singer Kenchi Tachibana dancer member of Exile and Exile The Second Tetsuya Dancer member of Exile and Exile The SecondAthletes edit Rich Alvarez professional basketball player Isao Inokuma Olympic gold medalist judoka Naohiro Ishikawa professional soccer player Junya Ito football player Naoyuki Kotani professional mixed martial artist Keith McDonald baseball player Stan McQuay IFBB professional bodybuilder Mark Munoz mixed martial artist Rei Nishiyama Olympic gold medalist softball player Tetsuya Ōkubo professional soccer player Hiroyuki Taniguchi professional soccer player Shuhei Terada professional soccer player Cameron Thomas professional basketball player Marcus Thomas professional football player Caol Uno professional mixed martial artist Susumu Yokosuka professional wrestlerOthers edit Susumu Ishii yakuza godfather Thomas Noguchi doctor Tsutsumi Sakamoto lawyer Ayumu Sasaki motorcycle racerSee also editPortal nbsp JapanReferences edit Basic Resident Register registration population Yokosuka City Retrieved 2018 02 21 permanent dead link Yokosuka cave network dug by Japanese during World War II sealed Stripes com Retrieved August 21 2017 history html Navy mil Retrieved August 21 2017 Demographics of Yokosuka April 13 2018 Archived from the original on April 14 2018 Retrieved April 13 2018 日産自動車株式会社 日産追浜工場 ようこそ 日産の工場へ Nissan Global com Archived from the original on April 8 2016 Retrieved August 21 2017 Japanese curry loved by all generations Stripes Japan 4 November 2018 Retrieved 17 November 2018 Yokosuka population statistics in Japanese Yokosuka population statistics 1995 2020 横須賀市 人口統計 Archived from the original on 2018 04 14 Retrieved 2018 04 13 横須賀市教育委員会 Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved December 9 2005 1 Archived December 16 2005 at the Wayback Machine NHK world 26 October 2011 Yokosuka conducts nuclear accident drill Archived May 11 2011 at the Wayback Machine Tabuchi Hiroko 2020 02 03 Japan Races to Build New Coal Burning Power Plants Despite the Climate Risks The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 02 03 a b 横須賀市行政サービス情報 姉妹都市 友好都市 企画調整部 国際交流課 Yokosuka Administrative Service Information Sister Cities Friendship Cities Yokosuka City Archived from the original on 2007 06 21 Retrieved 17 December 2013 Ryall Julian 28 April 2010 arushima Welcome to Monkey Island CNN Travel Cable News Network Retrieved 21 November 2012 Japan s 114 year old battleship Mikasa A relic of another time CNET com Retrieved August 21 2017 Yokosuka Arts Theatre Yokosuka Arts Theatre Archived from the original on 19 April 2016 Retrieved 7 March 2012 a b Special Features Hide Museum musicjapanplus jp Archived from the original on 2014 02 20 Retrieved 2014 02 03 Crystal Skulls hatsumode for the groove generation Yokosuka joins the party The Japan Times 2003 02 01 Retrieved January 3 2014 Yokosuka Birthplace of One of a Kind Japan Jackets JAPAN Monthly Web Magazine Archived from the original on 2021 05 30 Retrieved 2019 01 23 BATDORFF ALLISON 21 April 2006 Yokosuka street hosts players of video game Stars and Stripes Retrieved 9 July 2018 Yokosuka City Anime News Network www animenewsnetwork com Retrieved 12 April 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yokosuka Kanagawa nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Yokosuka Official Website in Japanese nbsp Geographic data related to Yokosuka at OpenStreetMap Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yokosuka amp oldid 1185386737, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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